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SPORTS
By Andrew R. Mooney
Wednesday, May 9, 2012
As the league seeks out higher levels of national exposure, it appears caught between two masters: the pressure to excel as a sports conference and the pull of tradition to maintain the status quo.
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SPORTS
By Saira Khanna
Monday, May 7, 2012
If you’ve ever missed the chance to see your favorite Harvard squad play because you missed out on those few ...
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NEWS
By Julia K. Dean
Saturday, May 5, 2012
Yale junior Brendan D. Ross, the driver of the U-Haul truck that killed a woman and injured two others at the Harvard-Yale football game this fall, was arrested on Friday.
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SPORTS
By Robert S Samuels
Wednesday, May 2, 2012
It’s that time of year. Reading Period is almost over, the cramming has begun, and exams are waiting just around the corner.
And if you’re looking for that much needed break from studying, Crimson Sports has got you covered. Below, we’ve compiled some of the best articles we’ve written all year for your procrastination pleasure. Enjoy.
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SPORTS
By Robert S Samuels
Wednesday, May 2, 2012
Ultimately not taken in the draft, which ran from April 26-28, Ortiz failed to sign a free agent contract afterwards.
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SPORTS
By Scott A. Sherman
Sunday, April 29, 2012
Senior left tackle Kevin Murphy hasn’t graduated yet, but he’s already headed back home.
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SPORTS
By Robert S Samuels
Friday, April 27, 2012
But despite his stature, Winters still has his sights set on the NFL, be it through a draft pick or a free agent contract.
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SPORTS
By Jacob D. H. Feldman
Wednesday, April 25, 2012
The winds of change howling through the world of sports safety have become impossible to ignore. Traditional football has nearly been toppled by the gusts, and the winds’ next victim, hockey, lies just around the corner. Adding to the drafts is none other than our little Ivy League.
The breezes began back in 2009, when the NFL was called out by Congress for not adequately protecting its players from the dangers of concussions and other head injuries.
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SPORTS
By Robert S Samuels
Wednesday, April 25, 2012
After an ugly loss to Holy Cross in the 2011 season opener, things looked bleak for the Harvard football team. But nine games and nine wins later, Harvard sat unscathed atop the world of Ivy football. And like Beethoven with his symphonies, the Crimson saved its best win for its last, its ninth: in Harvard’s Ode to Joy, the squad trounced the Bulldogs 45-7 to finish the Ivy League season a perfect 7-0.
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